Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun Any of several very large herbivorous mammals of the family Elephantidae native to Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia, having thick, almost hairless skin, a long, flexible, prehensile trunk, upper incisors forming long curved tusks of ivory, and, in the African species, large fan-shaped ears.
- noun Any of various extinct animals of the family Elephantidae.
- idiom (elephant in the room) A matter or problem that is obvious or of great importance but that is not discussed openly.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun A five-toed proboscidian mammal, of the genus Elephas, constituting a subfamily, Elephantinæ, and comprehending two living species, namely, Elephas indicus and Elephas (Loxodon) africanus.
- noun The former inhabits India, and is characterized by a concave high forehead, small ears, and comparatively small tusks; the latter is found in Africa, and has a convex forehead, great flapping ears, and large tusks. The tusks occur in both sexes, curving upward from the extremity of the upper jaw. The nose is prolonged into a cylindrical trunk or proboscis, at the extremity of which the nostrils open. The trunk is extremely flexible and highly sensitive, and terminates in a finger-like prehensile lobe. Elephants are the largest quadrupeds at present existing. Their tusks are of great value as ivory, furnishing an important article of commerce, in Africa especially, and occasioning the destruction of great numbers of these animals. Ten species of fossil elephants have been described, of which the best-known is the hairy mammoth, E. primigenius. The mastodons are nearly related to elephants, but form a separate subfamily Mastodontinæ (which see).
- noun Figuratively, a burdensome or perplexing possession or charge; something that one does not know what to do with or how to get rid of: as, to have an elephant on one's hands; he found his great house very much of an elephant.
- noun Ivory; the tusk of the elephant.
- noun A drawing-or writing-paper measuring in America 22x27 inches.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (Zoöl.) A mammal of the order Proboscidia and family
Elephantidae , of which two living species,Elephas maximus (formerlyElephas Indicus ) andLoxodonta Africana (formerlyE. Africanus ), and several fossil species, are known. They have five toes, a long proboscis or trunk, and two large ivory tusks proceeding from the extremity of the upper jaw, and curving upwards. The molar teeth are large and have transverse folds. Elephants are the largest land animals now existing. The elephant is classed as a pachyderm. - noun obsolete Ivory; the tusk of the elephant.
- noun (Bot.) an East Indian fruit with a rough, hard rind, and edible pulp, borne by
Feronia elephantum , a large tree related to the orange. - noun (Geol.) at Brighton, England, abounding in fossil remains of elephants.
- noun (Zoöl.) any very large beetle of the genus Goliathus (esp.
G. giganteus ), of the familyScarabæidæ . They inhabit West Africa. - noun (Zoöl.) a chimæroid fish (
Callorhynchus antarcticus ), with a proboscis-like projection of the snout. - noun paper of large size, 23 × 28 inches.
- noun paper measuring 263/4 × 40 inches. See Note under
Paper . - noun (Zoöl.) an African jumping shrew (
Macroscelides typicus ), having a long nose like a proboscis. - noun (Bot.) a name given to certain species of the genus Begonia, which have immense one-sided leaves.
- noun (Bot.) A genus (Elephantopus) of coarse, composite weeds.
- noun (Zoöl.) the tooth shell. See
Dentalium .
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A
mammal of the orderProboscidea , having atrunk , and two largeivory tusks jutting from the upperjaw . - noun figuratively Anything
huge andponderous . - noun paper, printing A printing-paper size measuring 30 inches x 22 inches.
- noun UK, childish used when counting to add length.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun five-toed pachyderm
- noun the symbol of the Republican Party; introduced in cartoons by Thomas Nast in 1874
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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While you may think the elephant is yours and yours alone, even the most solitary of projects are easier to digest with the right team and network in place.
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While you may think the elephant is yours and yours alone, even the most solitary of projects are easier to digest with the right team and network in place.
Women Grow Business » The Emerging Entrepreneur Gives Secrets to ‘How to Eat an Elephant’ 2009
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In Arabian literature the elephant is always connected with India.
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This lower jaw seemed incomprehensible, almost a monstrosity -- until it occurred to me that it exactly corresponds to the elongated upper lip and nose which we call the elephant's trunk -- and that the trunk of "Tetrabelodon" must have rested on his long lower jaw.
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His snout was drawn out so as to form that wonderful elongated thing with two nostrils at the end which we call the elephant's trunk, and was henceforth transmitted (a first-rate example of an "acquired character") to future generations!
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He writes of his safe arrival at what he calls the elephant-pens, and as a matter of course too late.
Trapped by Malays A Tale of Bayonet and Kris George Manville Fenn 1870
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The head of an athletic department in the mighty Southeastern Conference says the biggest problem with meeting gender equity is what he calls the elephant in the room: College football.
News 2010
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Alvin Blyer, regional director of the Brooklyn office of the NLRB, brought attention to what he described as the elephant in the room: the immigration and legal status of the workers.
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Mr. Davies also points to what he calls the elephant in the room - the fact that Britain remains outside of the euro zone.
DealBook 2009
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Over the past four years, Maryland's governor and legislators have gone to extraordinary pains to pretend this elephant is not in their living room, even as it strains our fiscal solvency.
Marylanders deserve more value for their tax dollars Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. 2010
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His foremost finding was the “elephant curve”—a graph of income trends worldwide since 1988 that showed significant gains for the “emerging global middle class” as well as the rich, while incomes for the very poorest and the “lower middle class of the rich world” had stagnated.
Inequality Without Class - Dissent Magazine Simon Torracinta 2024
fbharjo commented on the word elephant
"ivory beast" literally
February 4, 2009
bilby commented on the word elephant
Etymology seems a bit murky.
February 4, 2009
qroqqa commented on the word elephant
The Greek eléphant- means "ivory" in Homer and other early writers, "elephant" in Herodotus. It has no identifiable earlier history. The resemblance to Hebrew eleph "ox" might be more than coincidental, but if it's a North-West Semitic compound, it's unclear what the second element might have been.
February 4, 2009
rolig commented on the word elephant
Q., is eleph the source of the letter's name aleph (and hence, alpha)? Could the Elephant Man be an Alpha Male, etymologically speaking?
February 4, 2009
qroqqa commented on the word elephant
Yes, I think eleph is the construct state (form used in compound with a following noun) of aleph, the letter name, the shape A being an ox's head.
February 4, 2009
reesetee commented on the word elephant
Happy Elephant Appreciation Day!
September 23, 2009
oroboros commented on the word elephant
A unit of paper measurement.
August 29, 2010
bilby commented on the word elephant
Surely this beats scissors.
August 29, 2010
dontcry commented on the word elephant
*trumpet!*
August 29, 2010
ruzuzu commented on the word elephant
Sounds like a trumpet beats scissors.
August 31, 2010
dontcry commented on the word elephant
Do you know how to eat an elephant?
August 31, 2010
ruzuzu commented on the word elephant
How?
August 31, 2010
bilby commented on the word elephant
See relish.
August 31, 2010
dontcry commented on the word elephant
One bite at a time.
August 31, 2010
dllh commented on the word elephant
See also "olfend" (not defined here at wordnik), an old word for "camel" that may be related to "elephant."
April 26, 2012